Who goes through
Belgium to advance · 72%
United States 28%Belgium 72%
most likely 90′ score 1–2 · ~26% reach extra time · ~18% reach a shootout
advance model: 90′ consensus (Elo+Futi) routed through extra time + a coin-flip shootout · neutral venue
How they got here
How the heat stacks up
Tactical preview
Round of 16 | M94 | 2026-07-06 · 8:00 PM ET | Lumen Field, Seattle | TV TBD
Two 4-2-3-1 shapes on paper, but both teams spend significant time looking rather different from that when the ball is moving. Mauricio Pochettino's United States lean on Antonee Robinson's ability to push forward as a wing-back, which in turn frees Christian Pulisic to stay advanced and run directly at goal from wide right — the pattern he prefers. Alex Freeman's hybrid defensive role provides the structural cover that makes all of this possible, allowing the US to shift between a back three and back four depending on what the game demands. Belgium will need to be alive to those shape-shifts, because the moments of transition — when Robinson is high and Freeman is holding the line — are precisely where Pochettino's system is at its most dangerous and its most vulnerable in the same breath.
Rudi Garcia's Belgium push their own full-backs forward aggressively, and against a US team with genuine pace in wide areas, that creates a reciprocal risk. The central defenders left behind — potentially a combination of Arthur Theate, Nathan Ngoy, Koni De Winter, or Brandon Mechele depending on selection (verify before use) — are an inexperienced group to be exposing in a knockout game. The absence of Zeno Debast, whose composed ball-carrying and precise switch-passing would help Belgium's wide players find space, is a real blow to Garcia's team (verify before use). Belgium's best answer to any defensive fragility is to simply keep the ball and keep Jérémy Doku and Kevin De Bruyne on the front foot, so the game may come down to which midfield unit wins the territorial argument.
Weston McKennie versus Amadou Onana is the engine-room collision that will set the tempo. Both are high-energy, physically imposing central presences, and the team whose engine room comes out on top will likely control enough of the match to dictate terms. Romelu Lukaku, still Belgium's record goalscorer at 89, provides a reference point that gives De Bruyne a target to work around, and if the Belgian midfield can feed Doku in space on the flanks, a US back line still integrating a 21-year-old in Freeman at right-sided centre-back faces a genuinely uncomfortable evening.
Jérémy Doku against Alex Freeman. Doku's natural habitat is the touchline, running at defenders, and he has refined that game at Manchester City into something more patient and more dangerous — he now holds the ball, draws the press, and finds central runners rather than forcing the 1v1 immediately. Freeman, the Villarreal man making his World Cup debut at 21, is described as comfortable in 1v1 defending, but he has exactly three European club starts to his name. Doku will know that. Garcia's Belgium will know that. The Belgian winger will test Freeman's positioning, his recovery pace, and his composure in equal measure, and if Doku gets a run of success against him early, the entire right side of the US structure could find itself pinned back — which in turn prevents Robinson from pushing forward and collapses the attacking outlet that makes Pochettino's system function.
- Christian Pulisic, whose preferred pattern — receiving wide and driving directly at goal — will be tested by Belgium's advanced full-back shape leaving space in behind but less of it in front
- Weston McKennie's off-ball running as the engine that, per the profile, makes Pochettino's team tick rather than merely sparkle
- Kevin De Bruyne managing the creative burden, with Doku's improved patience now offering him a genuine wide release valve
- Romelu Lukaku as a target for Belgium to reorganise around when the US press is high and possession needs recycling
- Nathan Ngoy, potentially called upon at centre-back in a win-or-go-home knockout if the Debast situation has not resolved (verify before use)
- Sebastian Berhalter, who arrived in the squad under circumstances that are, to put it mildly, a talking point — his father publicly said he was not yet ready
Projected lineups and selection questions are not yet verified — refresh from current team news before kickoff. (verify before use)
- Gregg Berhalter told his son Sebastian in 2024 that he was not at the level to play for the national team; Seb received his first senior call-up the year after his father was sacked
- Arthur Theate shared a room with cyclist and Olympic gold medalist Remco Evenepoel during Evenepoel's time in the Belgian youth system
- Alex Freeman's father, Antonio Freeman, was an NFL wide receiver — the family has, in a sense, changed codes for the next generation
- The United States' best World Cup finish remains third place in 1930, the inaugural tournament; Belgium's is third place in 2018
- Tim Ream captains a US squad that carries Folarin Balogun, Ricardo Pepi, and Haji Wright as its three senior striker options — Garcia's Belgium counter with Lukaku alone at 89 international goals
Selection notes were pre-baked June 11 and are verified day-of in the edition, not here — anything marked “verify” must be confirmed before it is load-bearing.
Odds & best bet
| Market | Selection | Odds | Implied | Ours | Edge |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total goals | Over 2.5 | -141 | 56% | 59% | +3.4% |
| Total goals | Under 2.5 | +118 | 44% | 41% | -3.4% |
| Total goals | Over 3 | +113 | 45% | 48% | +3.1% |
| Total goals | Under 3 | -139 | 55% | 52% | -3.1% |
| Asian handicap | United States -0.5 | +152 | 38% | 19% | -18.9% |
| Asian handicap | Belgium +0.5 | -189 | 62% | 81% | +18.9% |
| To qualify | United States | — | 50% | 28% | -21.1% |
| To qualify | Belgium | — | 50% | 72% | +21.1% |
NO BET — no edge clears the 4% recording bar (a normal, expected result).
spreads away 0.5: model-priced edge +18.9% exceeds the 8% cap for uncorroborated markets (priced from our own score matrix, no consensus cross-check) — not recorded
market snapshot Jul 6, 3:59 AM ET · DraftKings where quoted, else best of 5 US books, de-vigged multiplicatively · totals / handicap / BTTS are model-priced from the score matrix — the Opta overlay covers W/D/L only, and with no independent consensus check they clear a stricter 8% edge ceiling vs 15% for 1X2 · O/U 3 can push (P 22%) — probabilities and edge are per unit at risk; a push refunds the stake · totals / handicap / BTTS settle on 90 minutes (regulation) — extra-time goals don't count toward them · advance edge derived from the 90' market (no quoted 'to qualify' line) — a model-vs-market read, not a recorded bet.